W orld /N ation S ports C o u r t r u le s to in c lu d e sa m e - s e x Ha r a s sm en t S e n io r s en d c a reer s at Ho m e v s . UCLA, USC P age 3 P age 13 mSSÊÊÈÊÉsnm ■Chsgfled» C o ñ a c s . - .......... O p i n i o n J j f S t e S a ii ■sporn .. ■ì ■-•■■■-•■. -• . V ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright, State Press, 1 Tentpe,. Arizona Vol. 83 No. 33 An Independent Morning Daily A S U o f f ic ia ls a g a in s t Thursday, March 5,1998 Testing for beer breath in c r e a s e in tu itio n incentive because it felt faculty members were not spending enough time with stu­ ASU faculty and administration say they dents in thé classroom, Linder said. Salary are opposed to the tuition-funded salary increases were given only to those teaching increase being considered by the Arizona more than six hours a week. Appropriations Committee. ' “It does not reflect die full effort of the fac­ The committee has proposed that 40 per­ ulty,” said Provost Milton Glick. “1 believe the cent o f substantial tuition best approach to salaries is increases for the 1998-99 where we reward people academic year be allocated on the contributions o f for faculty raises. I th in k it is im p o rta n t their work.” “The faculty, adminis­ John Lee, the tration, (Arizona Board of th a t tea ch ers ’ sa la ries Joint Legislative Budget R egents) and students Committee assistant direc­ a re in crea sed , b u t th e tor, said University faculty involved all oppose the suggestion,” said Darwyn is treated the sam e as co m m ittee w ho to o k Linder, Academic Senate other state employees. a c tio n in th is ca se w as president and psychology “Of the $10.1 mil­ professor. “We didn’t ini­ lion recom m ended for n o t d o in g it in g o o d tiate it, we don’t want it ASU employees, the fac­ fa ith . and we hope it will be ulty’s share is $5 million. eliminated.” ' — Drew Feth, This represents that facul­ F unding fo r UofA, Associated Students ty is treated exactly the ASU and NAU is com ­ same as any university of ASUCollege of and state employee for the prised of senate appropria­ tions, tuition, grants and Engineering senator faculty share o f salary contracts. Meager contri­ increases,” Lee said in a butions from the State letter addressed to the State Press Tuesday. Appropriations Committee Linder said the idea of negligent profes­ are forcing the tuition increase to simply keep sors is a misleading stereotype. the universities running, Linder said. “1 think it is im portant that teachers’ "W hen the A ppropriations Com m ittee doesn't meet its share, (the money) has to salaries are increased, but the committee come from somewhere else,” Linder said. who took action in this case was not doing it in good fa ith .” said D rew F eth, “Tuition is the only flexible area.” The Appropriations Committee created A ssociated Students o f ASU C ollege o f the T eaching Incentive Program , which Engineering senator. took e ffect in fall 1997, as a m onetary T urn t o T u itio n , page 2 . B y M o n ic a J . A gu irre S tate P ress * Jeremy Hein/State Press Senior justice studies major .Rich Gans (right) blows into a breathalyzer fo r OPS Officer Brian Swanty. Gans recorded a .12 alcohol level after drinking 10 beers in an hour. The sobriety test was part of the Student Health Center's Safe Spring Break Send-Off 98. M B A program B y B ecky B evins State P ress Beginning this fall, students working downtown will have the option to leave their cars where they are, walk a few blocks to the Mercado and crack open their books to pursue an MBA. “We are expecting to open up one class of 50 students at first,” said Lee McPheters, associate dean of the College of Business. “If there seems to be a larger demand later then we will look into expanding the program further.” The classes will be held at the Mercado complex, which is currently owned and operated by ASU. v The expansion follows after an article in U S. News & World Report ranked ASU’s MBA program 13th of all state institutions in the nation. The decision was made to go ahead with the project after a survey of larger businesses in the downtown area showed a large interest in putting its employees intoan MBA program. “The site is large and modem, and it is already equipped with official ASU computer labs so that professors and stu­ dents downtown will have comparable facilities available to those on main campus,” McPheters said. Using the site already in existence will not only add conve­ nience but will actually save die University money, he added. “If we would have put the program on campus then we would have had to spend extra money to fix up an area here for them, so this is actually a less-expensive way to go,” McPheters said. In addition the facility w ill have am ple parking and security available so that students downtown will be able to avoid traffic and crowd headaches. - ■ “There is already an ASU parkinjg structure there and our students w ill have first p rio rity ,” M cPheters said. “Besides, many of the students will have already parked at their jobs and parking won’t even be an issue.” The MBA program currently has an enrollment o f about 1,000 students. Four hundred o f those are day-time stu­ dents, many o f whom have come from out of state to attend ASU. There is an equal number of full time professionals who take classes at night twice a week. “We want to help students who want more education to get it,” said McPheters. “For many working downtown this may be the answer.” W eekend conference set to honor Angela Davis B y A lly A sh er State P ress l f you h a y fd conference honoring a freedom figh ter like Angela, it dispels the myth thatedl is well in America. There are still so m any injustices andform s o f oppression in the world, particularly in thi^^untryt W ell-k n o w n in te rn a tio n a l a c tiv ist and in te llectu al Angela Davis will be honored throughout the weekend dur­ ing a three-day conference geared to discuss diversity, p o li-, tics and unfinished liberation. The event, sponsored by the School of Justice Studies in connection with other ASU departments, is being held in — Iptren Carson, co n ju n ctio n w ith B lack H istory M onth and W om en’s History Month. The conference is a tribute to Davis for her president of the ASU chapte^rf the NAACP long-time efforts to end oppression. “All o f the speakers are coining in her honor,” said Karen known intellectuals in this country.” The conference, “Unfinished Liberation: Power, Identity Carson, presklent o f the ASU chapter of the NAACP. “It’s to honor her legacy. Angela is one o f the brightest and most well- and C ulture,” begins 9 a.m. Friday in the Katzin Music Hall, located across from Gammage Auditorium near the Music Building. However, there will be a movie screening 7:30 tonight in the Architecture Building to help jumpstart the events. Carson said it is important not only for students but the entire community to attend the conference. “W e’re talking about unfinished liberation,” Carson said. “If you have a conference honoring a freedom fighter like A ngela, it dispels the myth that all is well in America. There are still so many injustices and forms o f oppression in the worid, particularly in this country.” \ Davis, now a professor o f African-American studies at v the University of California at Santa Cruz, has been investiT u r n t o D a v is , p a g e 2 . S t a t e P ress Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 P a g;e 2 Torn C o n t in u ed from page b i s c >| CitipptJS clpps and orgapizationSjiQay J f submit writteri entries to m e State Press in f the basem ent o f the M atthew s Center. are unlim ited. The center is located in .- ■/ *, ■1 Requests , Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Steve Stein, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge, Gentry Smith, Charles Lundsberg. PRODUCTION: L. Adrianna Garcia, Steven Garza, Alyson Hurt, Wayne Nelson, Eric Paulson, Sara Pike, Jennifer Swinford, Hubert Alexi Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, Sharan Gill, David Goodwin, Mike Knievel, Monika Konat, Jessica Matluk, Jonathan Negretti, Shane ¡Siren, Kathy Welsh. CLASSIFIEDS: Kate Desio, Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its. members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: PERCY EDNALINO Editor JODI BAFUNDO Managing Editor Opinion Editor GINGER SCOTT News Editor CHRISTI FOIST T b c State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Roerán IS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is die only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. State Press Phone Numbers Inform ation............. ...9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N e w sr o o m ................. 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M a g a zin e....................9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A d vertisin g.................................. 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 . 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SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Flanagan (Track $ Field), C la ssified s......... ........9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 http ://news. vpsa. asu. edu O pinion St a t e P ress P ag e 5 Thursday, March 5,1998 L etters to the E ditor ASASU lacks effective organization E-MAIL THE EDITOR: SINJIN@IMAP2.ASU.EDU Tuition-increase facts Let’s get the fact straight! For the ASU Main, ASU W est and ASU East campuses, the Joint Legislative Budget Com m ittee (JLB C ) recom m ended $10.1 million for fiscal year 1999 salary adjust­ m ents, w hich includes $3,4 m illion for salary a n n u a liz a tio n , $2.9 m illio n fo r Classification Salary Adjustment and $3.8 million for merit increases. O f the $10.1 million recommended for ASU employees, the faculty’s share is $5 mil­ lion, which includes $1.6 million for full fund­ ing of merit and across-the-board annualiza­ tion, $ 1.3 million for CSA share and $2.1 mil­ lion for full funding o f 2.5 percent m erit increase. This represents that faculty is treated exactly the same as any university and state em ployee for the faculty share o f salary increases. In addition, the qualifying ranked faculty of ASU will receive the Teaching Incentive Program (TIP) allocation of $1.8 million of the $4-million TIP annualization. T herefore, the state is providing $6.8 million for faculty salary adjustment in FY 1999 fo r A SU alo n e. T h is is all state General F'und money. Your headline, which reads “Tuition increase may finance faculty raises,” (March 2) is totally false. T he fo o tn o te ad o p te d by th e Jo in t Appropriations Subcommittees will do two things: One, all faculty may receive addi­ tional bonusés if the A rizona Board o f Regents increases the tuition rate. Two, stu­ d en ts w ill b e n e fit from th e fa c u lty ’s improved performance in teaching. As you may know, the three universities have collected about $10 m illion more a year in tuition than what was appropriated by the Legislature in the past five years. Approximately 50 percent of the annual sur­ p lu ses is a ss o c ia te d w ith tu itio n -ra te increases and the oth er 50 percent w ith enrollm ent and tuition mix. Thus, the 40 percent footnote language directs the uni­ versities to use about $2 million of the sur­ pluses for additional faculty salary bonuses. In sum, faculty are receiving more salary increases from the state General Fund than all other state and university employées dur­ ing FY 1999. And the ultimate beneficiaries are the students for quality education. John Lee A ssistant D irector Joint Legislative Budget Committee Newman motivates We’d like to respond to Monday’s column by Ross Eide “Hiring Don Newman as head basketball coach not best move for ASU bas­ ketball” (Mar. 2). While we respect his free­ dom of speech, w e’d like to ask him how many men’s basketball games he had attended last season and this season. We bet he hadn’t been to many games. Everyone who has been following and supporting the team in this sea­ son would never say something like Eide said. As season-ticket holders for two seasons, we’ve witnessed almost everything: the heart­ breaking losing season, the departure of Frieder, the arrival of Newman and the unfor­ gettable winning season. It is obvious to true fans that Coach Newman is the man for the team. With five or six players returning from last season, the team has a new look. Players are having fun playing basketball. They’ve found the joy of playing basketball, and we believe that Coach Newman is the one who has been showing the joy to them. They don’t care who scores more points as long as they win and have fun. Eide said the players worry that they might be replaced by “better players” if ASU hired one of the “big name coaches.” Which player said that? Can he prove it? Eide goes on saying that Newman can’t motivate good players once they are on top. Doesn’t he know the ASU team has Jeremy Veal, whom we’ll be watching in the NBA in the near future? Hey Eide, what do you know about basketball and this teamanyway? M ikuru Hino Junior Public Program s JoeM ayum i Junior That’s it! DRIAN T h is is the FONTES straw that broke the c a m e l’s back. I’ve been Guest Columnist trying to tell the ASASU Senate that they need to change their ways, they just won’t listen. I got an e-mail late Tuesday night that justifies all my com plaining. It should make everyone sit up and pay attention. SUN DEVILS, "THIS SENATE REP­ RESENTS YOU!" F ir s t lin e , “ I j u s t a tte n d e d an A SA SU S en ate m e e tin g to n ig h t and thought it was one o f the m ost horrible e x p e r ie n c e s .” R e m e m b e r, f d id n o t write this, this is an ASU student com ­ plaining to m e about your student gov­ ernm ent' it gets worse, “It started at 5:30 p.m. and 1 left at 8 p.m., and it was still going on.” In defease o f the senate, meetings usually last a while, but later on, We find ottf why. She continues, “Throughout, the whole meeting, drey were throwing low blows to each other about.everything. Even things so small as the V p of Activities went to a conference at Texas A&M this weekend an d w as co m m en tin g o n ho w m uch school spirit they have. One o f the senalftors attacked her viewpoints right away.” This is typical o f the tim e-w asting, childish bickering for which this senate is famous. Thai student was at the meeting for a specific reason, which is irrelevant. W hat idle got o u t o f it w as the w orst im pression th at she could w alk away with. She could not even stand to stay for the entire meeting! W ith all o f the negative attention the ASASU senate has been bringing itself all year, you’d think they could g et it right for one meeting. Y ou’d think the A SA SU se n a te c o u ld h a v e o n e c iv il m eetin g , a m e e tin g w h ere A S U s tu ­ dents could com e to hear tb sentatives deliberate issues o f substance and m eaning to their constituents. ■ What did die ASASU senate deliver? Whai kind o f message did this student get from her elected officials? The following ; direct quote spells it our better th a n le v e r could: “F o r an organization, they sure don’t know how to work together; they seem like a bunch o f power-hungry peo­ ple just Out to get someone. Like I said, it was a horrible experience.” * morning. They need to know what you think about them , and it seems that late­ ly, even thougb I have been trying to m otivate them to serve w ell, my public cam paign is obviously not having any effect. It sure is making an impression on the students who watch them work. Students w ho want to m ake posittve c h a n g e w an t to g et in v o lv e d . B ut if th e y g o to a m e e tin g an d se e th e se childish antics, do you think, they will want to waste their time ? W ho wants to w aste tw o T u esd ay s e v e ry m o n th in Rom per Room? I guess it takes m ore than one stu­ dent to m ake these people understand the situation. A s with all things, there is strength in numbers. W hen the ASASU senators- speak, they are speaking for you. W hen they m ake decisions, they m ak e th em fo r you. A n d w h en th ey make fools o f them selves,,«: well, you jdpturfc» i l l -T h e te s t o f .ASASU is doing som e good stuff, I m ust admit. R ot when stu­ dents have to a ir their grievances to me, w h e n l g e t a - c o m p la in t, a b o u t th e ASA SU se n a te , it m akes m e w ant to ru n to th e to p o f th e L ife S c ie n c e s b u ild in g and sh o u t a t th e to p o f my Jungs, “I TOLD YOU SO!” Now, ASASU as a. whole m ay think that I ’m the one driving students away from their organization. I f that’s the case, why dries ASASU lrave to advertise there are Still funds available for clubs — the v ery clubs that depend on ASASU fo r funding? W hy was there no advertising fo r the elections w ben it’s the election th at provides new leadership fo r nex t year? W hy i s j t that so few students even know we have a student government, or what its role is, or how important it is that they suppoOi.n? > f think fire SnowDevils ought to take oyer ASAfiU. They have great support, o rg an izatio n and stro n g m em bership. They focus on & plan, whatever' it is, and they execute it. well. Their membership is diverse, and at 860-ish members, they are :probably bigger than ASASU, insofar as active members are concerned./ The ShowDeviJS are also relevant, rec­ ognizable and- real, three characteristics that the ASASU senate lacks. 1 hope none Ouch. • ,»-• o f them aiq nam ing for re-election (cur­ | To be fair to the ASASU senate, I rent ASASU senators). If they are, I’ll let ; have included a full text o f the e-mail, voa know. ■ along with some o f your other respons­ es to me and my writing, in an informa­ tional packet that they will- receive this Adrian Fontes is a senior studying com­ munication and can be reached a t adri- ■ an.fontes@asu.edu via e-mail. . Media deciding guilt or innocence, taking over job of the courts It’s a sad story: COTT A g e n tle , p io u s A v o n d a le BENNETT woman was tied up, raped and k ille d la st W ed n esd ay w h ile d eliv erin g a box o f food to a Columnist poor Phoenix family. Worse yet, she was delivering the food on behalf o f her church. The gesture embodied her faith. Trudy Calabrese died for her convictions and kindness. Now a family, church and com­ munity mourn her. By all accounts, she was a saint. Now the circle is complete: she is a martyr. However, there’s a sadder story: John and Kara Sansing are being held in connection with Calabrese’s death. According to police, John Sansing tied up Calabrese, raped her and then stabbed her to death —possibly in front o f his children. It’s enough to make a thoughtful person wonder if the world has truly gone mad. It gets worse: The Arizona Republic ran feature stories Saturday on the alleged killers. In one of the articles, neighbors described John Sansing as “a mean-tempered man who struck his wife and milked the welfare system for food, housing and other hando u ts.” Y et his p ru rien ce did not end there. John Sansing had “brushes with the law in Utah,” and “has strug- ; S gied with serious drug problems that have included mari­ juana and more powerful substances.” Even moré repug­ nant, he allegedly sent his children through the neighbor­ hood like winged monkeys from The Wizard o f Oz, “asking people to cough up cigarette money for their father.” Sweet Jesus — that man must be a killer. It would be easy to hate John Sansing, a disgusting man who allegedly raped and killed a woman delivering him a dose o f kindness. It would be easy, except for one tiny, petty little detail: John and Kara Sansing have not been found guilty o f the crime. They have hot even gone to trial. Regardless, the Republic has crucified them on a newsprint cross. Even if the Sansings are acquitted, their lives will never be the same. The media have smeared the-bloody entrails of their lives across black-and-white pages. No one’s past is spotless, but theirs is now public record. The past few weeks overflow with examples of trial by printing press. Two men were arrested in Las Vegas last week for possessing the anthrax virus. The press pounced on the story, speculating that the men were biological ter­ ro rists, perhaps' even Saddam H u sse in ’s m in io n s on American soil. Turns out they were only scientists. Sources claim that a former White House intern had a sexual affair with the president, who then pressured her to lie about it. Reporters have been attacking Clinton like ravenous sharks, ripping his character into bloody little bits. Too bad there is no proof. What if I held a press conference to announce that Gov. Jane Hull had forced me to have sex with her? Could I be on Meet the Press, too? Actual guilt is not the issue. John Sansing is probably a rapist and killer, and Clinton is probably lecherous and def­ initely guilty o f stretching the truth. That, however, is for the courts to determine. The media exist to relay informa­ tion, not pass judgment. In America, accused criminals are “innocent until proven guilty.” Otherwise, justice cannot exist. We, media con­ sumers, must not allow reporters to violate that principle. Our entire society loses when every person merely accused of-a crim e is flayed by the press. W hat if it were you? Would you want your personal life splattered like a bug on the Republic's front page? There is one solution: D on’t ju st absorb. D on’t be a sponge. D on’t let the R epublic convince you o f John Sansing’s guilt. Use your squishy gray stuff. Otherwise, to quote Sheryl Crow, “Justice is a faded lie.” Scott Bennett is a sophomore studying journalism and can be reached at columnist @asu. edu via e-mail. S t a t e P ress , Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 ;e 6 Money from merger of organizations to augment Tempe schools’ art funding B y A i s l in n F a h y S t a t e P r e ss Tw o Tem pe organizations have m erged in an effort to em phasize the business com m unity’s involvem ent in education. T h e T em p e C o m m u n ity Im p a c t F o u n d a tio n w as estab lish ed w hen the Tem pe C ham ber o f C om m erce b u s in e s s re s o u rc e m e rg e d w ith th e T em p e Im p act E du catio n (T IE ) Fund, a sch o o l-o rien ted foundation th a t lo st a lo t o f its support d u e to school spending Cuts this p ast year. The City plans to infuse $2.6 m illion into the Tem pe E lem entary School D istrict over the next five years in hopes o f producing students w ith better jo b skills. Tax deductible donations w ill serve as an added incentive for businesses who w ant to get involved. “The m ission statem ents betw een the tw o organiza­ tio n s w ere so c lo s e ,” said C h ris M o ss, th e fo u n d a­ tio n ’s d e v e lo p m e n ta l d ire c to r. '‘T h e m e rg e r d id n ’t really require m uch fine-tuning.” M oss said th e form ation o f the foundation seem ed logical because the C ham ber is a group that had a lot o f energy but little direction in this area. “On the other hand, w e had this oth er organization that had a lot o f direction but because o f circum stance, w ere worn out,” M oss said. “They needed new blood and the m erger provides that.” M oss said there w ill be a lot o f em phasis placed on a rts p ro g ra m s and a b o u t $ 1 7 7 ,0 0 0 w ill be d e v o te d tow ard this area. “W e have found that students w ith heavy art back­ grounds becom e b etter leaders,” she said. “W e expect that reading and m ath scores w ill ju m p dram atically.” L in d a S la te , v isu a l a rts c o o rd in a to r f o r T em p e E lem entary Schools, said it is tim e the city supports art program s. “It is really an area th at co u ld be so b e n e fic ia l,” Slate said. “B ut the tim e and energy needs to be put into it.” Slate, w ho sat on the board o f the TIE Fund, said this m erger w ill be positive because the arts program w ill finally get the attention it deserves, because the tw o g ro u p s w ill o ffe r so m e th in g th a t w as la c k in g before. The foundation w ill continue w ith efforts m ade by the previous organizations in an effort to foster critical thinking, encourage team environm ents and increase stu d en ts self-esteem . T h ere w ill, h o w ev er, be m ore c o n c e n tr a tio n on g e ttin g c o m m u n ity b u s in e s s e s involved. “Tem pe schools sim ply can ’t do it alone anym ore,” M oss said, ad d in g th at n e ig h b o rin g school d istric ts h av e im p lem en ted sim ila r p lan s. “W e c a n ’t let o u r schools get left behind.” on over for a T H IS C O UPO N V A L ID O N LY A T : ^ B E K & J J E R R Y 'S V E R M O N T ’S F IN E S T • ICE C R E A M & FR O Z E N Y O G U R T - 411 S o u th M ill A v e ., T e m p e , A Z 8 3 2 8 ] I co u p o n ex p ires 3 /2 1 /9 8 < 6 0 2 )7 3 6 -w o o “ T* “^SFÆÔNâDOTioMliS" CROSSWORD A3 a d S O 8 MV A a 3a V 31 30N0 a N 3 1 N 1 S 3É1 N 0 Lsn H i 0 0S V sa a 0 a 3’a S A V 0 A 3 H 39 V 1 V 3 a 1O 3a n 13a d 0 V 1 A8 8 V 1 3 9 V8 A H V 3 1 's V3a 1 3 S 1 3S 1 3S 0 N a 3N 3d0 i n 8 V i N V 1 n in by THOMAS JOSEPH A S U 's O N L Y M a ro o n P iz z a a n d G o ld D e liv e r y O p tio n ! ASU Calls D om ino ' s 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 Proferrod a t ASU Vfe Match A_______For SK This State Press SPECIAL! - I t e ACROSS 1 G enetic oddity 7 Border on 11 First gam e 12 Type of job? 13 D isease­ bearing fly 14 Brain­ storm 15 Passionate 1 7 Noted nam e in advice 2 0 Donut’s kin 2 3 Philosopher — tzu 2 4 M usical intro 2 6 Archaic 2 7 H ave a bite 2 8 Epoch 2 9 Prim e tim es 31 Blushing 3 2 Neckw ear choice 3 3 Bettor’s worry 3 4 “Prizzi’s Honor* director 37 Draws 3 9 M ean 43 Form erly 4 4 Ripper 4 5 Talks and talks 4 6 Fish­ grabbing bird DOWN 1 W itty rem ark 2 Good tim es 3 Course start 4 Nervous 5 Lair 6 Apple or olive 7*20 19 Obstruct­ ing act, in hockey 21 Trim m ed 2 2 C ity on th e Aire 2 4 Moss types 25 Singer Charles 3 0 Extin­ guishes 3 3 Available Questions* category 8 Protector, o f a sort 9 Exploit 10 British brew 16 Helps 17 Haw aiian greeting 18 Cotton units It 1 2 3 4 5 6 AH Competitor's Offers! We reserve the right to substitute comparable products. Must present competitor’s coupon when ordering 1 S P 3 /5 No Limit on Number off Pizzas Order As M any As You Like! m Limited Time Only! 13 7 35 Yugosla­ vian leader 36 W allet fillers 3 7 Stocking stuffer 3 8 O ne — million 4 0 G o aw ry 41 W eddingpage word 4 2 Arid 8 B 10 _ § *■ « * « 1 16 15 17 18 19 23 21 22 24 25 1!1 30 26 29 ■ 28 J 133 32 À 35 36 34 37 38 40 41 42 ■ J "m 45 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE N PVYNVXV N G OZ NO Large Deep Dish & Specialty Crust $1 More Domino’S Pizza-The Pizza Delivery Experts! O ffers Valid a t T his L ocation Only: S . R u ral R d 11:00am - 1:30am SunVThurs. 11:00am - 2:30am Fri & Sat. Our drivers carry less than $20 FZO T VV A H N G KS O V J . QZ M EV O O N G E N OFNGT WY V S G . — ENYPVJO T. WFVHOVJOZG Y e sterd a y 's C r y p to q u o te: A MAN NEVER REACHES THAT DIZZY HEIGHT OF WISDOM WHEN HE CAN NO LONGER BE LED BY THE NOSE.—MARK TWAIN S t a t s P ress T e c h n o lo g y s h o w By D a v id W o o d f il i . State P ress More than 100 disabled ASU students gathered at Matthews Hall ‘Wednesday, to view new technology for disabled students. The show featured 12 vendors of office technology for people with hearing, visual, physical and learning disabilities. David Carey, an ASU graduate in physi­ cal education, came up with the idea to hold an event for disabled students that would make them aw are o f the latest resources P Rage 7 Thursday, March 5 ,1 9 9 8 o l ic e R f o r d i s a b l e d d r a w s >1 0 0 - p l u s that are available through the University. He said he always wishpd that someone would have helped him in a sim ilar way while he was a student. “I just hope that this will help (disabled) people,” he said. “T here’s a lot o f work involved in this, but I feel very rewarded.” C arey, w ho w as p a ra ly z e d from the w aist down in 1989 when a stray bullet pierced his spine while he was sleeping in his bed, felt that the show could benefit more that just disabled students. s tu d e n ts “Anybody can use this stuff,” Carey said* was a great chance for students to check out “Like the voice-recognition technology ¿an be | the latest technology. He added however, used by anybody who doesn’t type very well.” that it w asn’t an opportunity that comes Tedde S charf, associate d irecto r fo r around very often. Disabled Student Resources, said that she “ I ’m o v erjo y ed b ecau se the m ore a w as su rp ris e d by th e tu rn o u t fo r th e disabled person can see w hat, resources are availab le to them , the m ore clo ser showcasing. “H e (C arey) has done a g reat jo b at they can come to living independently,” bringing a very balanced and professional he said. “Take m e fo r exam ple — th is presentation for students,” Scharf said. spring I’ll be graduating and I w ant to Michael Judge, a senior studying broad­ know o f every opportunity that will help casting, said he thought the presentation me in the career w orld.” e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • An employee reported someone trashed an ASU electric cart at 100 S. Hardy Drive. • An em ployee reported that som eone busted into the Farmer Building and snagged a Sony digital camera. • A woman not associated with ASU reported she lost her passport while at ASU. Today’s photo radar locations are: • R u ra l R o a d b e tw e e n R io S a la d o P a rk w a y an d University Drive • University Drive between Rural Road and McClintock Drive • Warner Road between Hardy and Priest drives • M c C lin to c k D riv e b e tw e e n B ro a d w a y R o ad and Southern Avenue • Compiled by State Press reporter Kristen Hatcher. Lease a little place in the sun. The 1 9 9 8 Cobrio Premium II A M /F M Stereo cassette, 2 .0 Liter Engine, Dual Airbags, Anti-Theft Alarm System, Fully Padded 6-Layer Convertible Top. C ’m on. It's w h a t you alw ays w a n te d . A little flashy convertible to cruise aro u n d in. And a n SPF 40 lease rate to m a k e sure you d o n ’t g e t burned. So w hy fight it? Just swing by your lo c a l V olksw agen d e a le r, so you c a n start w orking on your tan. Drivers wanted.™ $ 2 5 5 y m o n th . 2 4 m o n th le a s e e * $ 1 /9 7 8 .8 3 required a t lease signing; includes refundable security deposit; excludes tax, title an d other options an d d e aler charges. Lease offered to qualified customer by Volkswagen C redit through participating dealers. Supplies limited, must take delivery b y M a rc h 3 1 , 1 9 9 8 . Rate based on $ 1 9 ,3 3 5 .0 0 MSRP for a 1 9 9 8 C ab rio with 5-speed manual transmission, Premium Stereo, air conditioning an d freight. Requires d e a le r contribution which could affect final negotiated transaction. Lessee responsible for insurance. M a y b e some financial obligations at lease end. Dealers set actual prices. N o C harg e Scheduled M a intenan ce for 2 years or 2 4 , 0 0 0 miles, whichever comes first. S ee deafer for details, © 1 9 9 8 Volkswagen. Berge Volkswagen 1515 W . Broadway M esa Biddulph Volkswagen 4611 W . Glendale Aye. Glendale Chapman Volkswagen 6601 E. McDowell Road Scottsdale Cdmelback Volkswagen 1499 E. Camelback Road Phoenix 833-0001 9340211 949-7600 265-6600 www.vw.com or call 1-800-444-8987 S t a t e P ress Thmsday, M arch é, 1998 FBI charges 14 individuals in six companies w ith conspiracy B y L arry N eumeister A ssociated P ress NEW YORK — In the first federal prosecution of sports betting over the Internet, the FBI Wednesday brought con­ spiracy charges against 14 owners and managers of offshore companies with sports betting pages. “The Internet is not an electronic sanctuary for illegal bet­ ting,” Attorney General Janet Reno said in a statement “It’s a federal crime to use the Internet to conduct betting opera­ tions.” . The defendants, including two former stockbrokers and a lawyer, let thousands of clients across the United States wager on professional and college sports events through six compa­ nies, prosecutors alleged. U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White said the defendants broke a 1961 law making it a crime to use interstate telephone lines for gambling. “Such blatant and widespread efforts to evade gambling laws cannot and w ill not be tolerated,” W hite said at a Manhattan news conference. One o f the defendants, K ory Rogers, blasted prosecutors in a telephone interview from Las Vegas, calling the charges “ridiculous.” “They’ve got guys shooting people up in New York. Don’t they have anything better to do? I’m not in the gambling busi­ ness. I’m in the Internet business,” he said, describing his work as an Internet provider as more like that of a landlord. He defended the company prosecutors linked him with even though he said he only provides them space on the Internet. “They clearly have a license to do it. I ’ve read the law a hundred times. I’ve asked several lawyers and it’S legal,” Rogers' stud. : The Companies charged were located in the Caribbean and Central America, but some also had offices in New York City. White said 90 percent o f their customers were in the United States. The dompanies advertised their sites in magazines and through prom otiqnal m ailings and their ow n W eb sites. Bettors opened accounts with initial deposits of $100 to $500 and placed their bets via computers or over toll-free telephone numbers and were required to pay a 10-percent fee, authori­ ties said. Two of the 14 have been arrested and the remaining defen­ dants were notified that they will be arrested when they return to the United States, the authorities said. All are U.S. citizens. If convicted, the defendants each face a maximum sen­ tence of five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. This coupon is good for one free copy of ■ 1 Mimi ITATIVIIÎ|«SITT ■ "k - State Press ¿¿SIS] V is it t h e O n lin e C a m p a ig n a t h t t p : //w w w .g iu li a n o .o r g S t a t e P ress Page 9 Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 G iv e y o u r B u d d ie s a B e fo r e Break . . . w it h o u t B r e a k i n g 4 1 / 2* th e Bank a m inute Jong distance ra te s to anywhere in th e U.S. when you purchase p re -p a id minutes online a t w w w .in ter-tel.n et - o r 6 * a m inute when you caJJ 8 0 0 -3 3 3 -3 2 7 9 . Saving your pennies for a trip to the beach this Spring Break? With prepaid long distance from Inter-Tel.Net, you could be saving a bundle on your long distance bills right now. Purchase long distance service for ju st 4*/20 a minute online at www.inter-tel.net, or purchase over-the-phone at 800333-3279 for long distance service at 60 a m inute. Use our pay-as-you-play service to call anywhere in the continental U.S., from any phone*, at any time of day. You'll save up to 65 % over your other calling card and 50% over your run-of-the-mill residential long distance service. Either way, you save big. That's why Ihter-Tel.net is creating a buzz across the nation. ♦ Does not include toll charges to your local Inter-Tel.net access number. Visit ourw ebsite at www.inter-tel.net for details. L o n a D i s t a n c e f o r L e s s T h a n Q N ic k e l w w w .I n t e r - T e l . n e t IN T E R - T E L State P ress Thursday, M arch 5, 1998 Page 10 British interfaith leader wins $1 m illion religion prize Bv A D a v id B s s o c ia t e d r ig g s P ■ ress N EW Y O R K — T h e B r itis h b u s in e s s m a n w ho helped m ediate a controversy over the placem ent o f a Catholic convent near Auschw itz has won the $1.2 m il­ lion Tem pleton Prize for Progress in Religion, the rich­ e st award for achievem ent in any field. T h e p r iz e W e d n e s d a y w e n t to S ir S ig m u n d S tern b erg , 76, ex ecu tiv e co m m ittee chairm an o f the International Council o f Christians and Jews. “It is tim e for religion to cóm e out of the church, the synagogue, the m osque, the tem ple,” he said. “W hile it is recognized that all religions have their own truths, and these shall be unassailable, there is a sense o f a sp irit w hich soars above all else and w hich, if h ar­ nessed, could contribute to the creation o f caring soci­ eties as nothing else could.” The T em pleton P rize w as estab lish ed in 1972 by investm ent m anager John M. T em pleton. T he aw ard will be bestowed at Buckingham Palace in May. Sternberg was bom in Hungary and Went to Britain in 1939 during the rise o f N azism . H e founded real estate and software companies and becam e one o f the earliest and strongest advocates for interfaith dialogue, He helped resolve the dispute that developed in 1984 when a group o f Carm elite nuns established a convent at the perim eter o f the Auschwitz death camp in Poland. The nuns said their intent Was to pray for death-camp victims- B ut others saw it as an intrusion into a setting indelibly linked to the Holocaust. In m e e tin g s w ith C a th o lic and Je w ish le a d e rs , Sternberg helped develop a consensus for m oving the convent. The nuns moved out in 1993. Last month, the governm ent announced a w ooden cross rem aining on BROS! the site would be moved. Last year, along with Sheikh Zaki Badawi, principal o f M uslim College in London, Sternberg established the T h ree F aith s F orum .to fin d com m on g round am ong Judaism , Islam and Christianity. Sternberg said he is “certainly ho saint.” “I am really a sim ple soul, a businessm an, who, in a m odest w ay, has been sm iled on by fortune and who h a s tr ie d to re p a y th e b le s s in g s w h ic h h a v e b e e n bestow ed on m e by opening to others a sense o f the goodness which lies in us all, regardless o f our faith,” he said. S te rn b e rg is th e se c o n d Je w ish re c ip ie n t o f the Tem pleton Prize. Lord Jakobovitz, form er ch ief rabbi o f B ritain, w on in 1991. O ther p ast w inners include B illy G ra h a m , M o th e r T e re s a a n d A le x a n d e r Solzhenitsyn. BA6£ i $ TheMeet & Eat Game Einstein Bros® wants to set up great ASU singles for a free blind date lunch. So, check out the contestant’s three choices pictured below and vote by e-mailing BagelDate@asu.edu or by dropping this ad off either at the State Press in the basement of Matthews Center or at the Einstein Bros in the Cornerstone at Rural and University by noon on Monday. The lucky couple will be published in next:Tuesday’s State Press. ■ : « nPT®' BACHELOR NUMBER ONE H ung Sa R ath Kloeung CONTESTANT NUMBER THREE Senior, H istory “Pick th is p o et & I w ill m ake y o u s w o o n all over." BACHELOR NUMBER TWO M ichael V alenzuela Junior, E ngineering “P ick m e! I'm a poor college stu d e n t. I n eed a fr e e lunch." Congrats to the winners of the State P re ss & Oakland A*s spring training ticket give-away contest! BACHELOR NUMBER THREE C hristie Sim on Junior, B roadcast Journalism . “I’m Jim , I’m Jierce and w ait ‘til you see w hat I've got pierced! I'm a party girt 'cuz I ju s t turned 2 1 ,1’U be the burger, you be the bun." Ridgley F itzsim m ons Sénior, political science “No autographs, p lea se." Look for this promotion every Thursday. If you’d like to be in the “Lovin’ Lunchin” dating game, complete the form below. Winners w ill be announced everyIhesday in the State Press. In the Pinal Edition o f the sem ester the State Press w ill publish all the participants and their experiences. Here's how to get a date in the Einstein Bros9 Are you a: FRESHMAN SOPHOMORE JUNIOR S H « O R id id e en e) Your Gender. MALE Wit! you agree to have the State Press take your photo? YES NO FEMALE (ch cteorw ) ■ Does the State Press have permission to publish the photo in ad(s)7 YES ED A d a m D u ric a J o h n R e a rd o n R o b e rt P e a rs a ll W a rre n M c llv o y S p e n c e r B u tle r C h ris S le ts e m a B ry a n K . D u n a j J o e S c h m id t Z a c h Irw in K a th le e n T u c k e r Another fun thing brought to you by: "S t S eT resI T NEED> A R I P E ? ■V 1 A * -fc //w NEVER a n d Ul bum P o n t ia c a R ID E t CO Ul Vii Uj ■< 3 - { § 'C -S a f 1 .Vi> £ 1f^i £ I c I -» f* i ! v'S F 1 ^ 111 5 | s f i I li * I ^ i I ■'-*•. Comics S t a t e P ress Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 Page 12 T rials & T ribulations B y Jo n a t h a n I n g e wms® hey e ver yb o d y .' ANDES... I PROFESSOR SHCllEYi PL ANC CRASHED INTO ' - B y C arrie L Behrens The longest escalator is in four sections outdoors at Ocean Parie, Hong Kong. CN, 5*f@# NO BLANKETS.« NO F O D P ... m DEATHLY Cold.. rue andes Moumws! S nacks It is 745 feet long and has a total vertical rise o f 377 feet. -friW Aj W t Jocular Parable B y D a v id G o u l d une-'SfJow em -, » F l WO YÛUR MINIMAUST- p ep icT iof/iD ge ^VOWMT WHATAPe tS 5i l& A MtTAPHDt rOfl w tu -a ci u w i gAewity L5ywt>iCAmp. > . m| " V T| fp ^ y o u O dA ^r?, lVASAf®A»01 you w e p f _ JütN/Nó "01^ WATlo ti O P I S L A M <*• pi -5 1 S W T T H IS uuu? IS ' 2S2 §?! TSeinHM+m látia; Xn A the CoNTt»JOtW& H all ÊEFo r t B y G e n t r y S m it h OPTION *y. T6MQM- T hqa oPTYW PLA>y RAIL o p t io n *V - To Ç>£Tl£R. CMaTM«, UTE, THE tAANAöfctA&HT X WAV TAUUtffr VÏTH ? o , Uvee», X THINK FR£VenT5> THv> W TER, iT WAy o&FinntL.y W HO tOU CATiomAL. 9feR\ty: Ntw yen.*., H »W O R Ib IN H M To P tM , A VW w yiw & T wtTVV a u s .n t w ■’ U V fcV FRoWv, IN x'w w here ■ - The &&>t Hosnfc * VW?tp THE PACE Çfc> $0& > yiwf^Au: g A y ty iiij W i i . STAVED C A v lt 5TA N 0 e p e ct: w^y F fe o o v .t. NoT^ Ç/W(5r< VTofr H«w Ba d vaJ e . :iwhere-6 w e tof ge-rwee-Aj B y C h a r l e s W e sle y OUF s a u IULES SAY THAT b A U tb b B A W ( N 6 B e Æ A S T S AMD C A R B -tE 'S IWSAWfe P u a J - F ACTS ■THEM b i b AWY ASASU éstecnoW haiku Heee at odark Ç & C .T ! tv/ER. UKfc. \T & B y Jim W ‘»Hoot T h &iA IH 96 C h ic k e n - s t ic k B u g F a c e Jim W oflark© 1997 All Rights Reserved A cross s A b H aucu vooucb Q f e to t a ice myer T i m e T® thaw Vi. Y o u , o o ^ BELOÓeù t e AOeftS. Y es, BECAUSE t ó A - i z e t h a t \wè : oh cætt 's not ÍVtóB-e PEOPLE vAmete /A.P.B.P.TIA ANO w e 0(0 it ooithoot PAUL.Y SHopeTOof P o A û e rr TWAT"/vieixoco, T e r BÆ’FeeSHiws <5© u t r v S /n iT M S T P -lP . ÇO SHAfce A PA6£- i/on>| 5oA>e F ttP cer . Coiw PeTtT/oA ) io £ CAn t , But w îw o c h ba e \j J lU - PUT AAY —XJ~ . ■ (2-eAbEB- IheAS AWb P i c t u r e s /m t h i s ■"âTRiP, so eftvAvu : LTHE. ARTIST' iF Y uu ioamt t ° fee iceeP BeABiNs s e e a) H e r e .. t HaWks abaih B n j The Sun Devils will go into this tournament while try­ ing to improve on last season’s fifth-place conference fin­ ish. j0 “We want to go in there and prove that we can beat anyone,” ju n io r A ndre T rinidad said. “W e are really focused right now. We definitely need a big performane from all of our guys in order to be competitive.” Farrell added, “W e definitely have the potential to pull off some surprises.” Only six teams will compete in the conference meet, but five of the six teams participating hold top-10 status. “The competition out here will be really tough,” senior Robert Delgado said. “Everyone of us will swim well since we’ve trained so much. W e’re very rested and fresh to go.” From the Blocks • Junior All-American Francisco Sanchez.will try to repeat as conference champion in the 50- and 100-meter freestyle event. • The Sun Devils have won six of their last eight meets. • Conference tournament action begins today and contin­ ues through Saturday. C l a s s if ie d s Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company arid offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility forthe validity of the offers advertised in our classified section: For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. HOMES FOR RENT 4BD 2BA w/pool $1150/mo: ; Ibd Tba $450/mo.; 3bd 2ba w/AZ room $850/mo.; 2bd Iba $600/mo. 894-0288 MOVE IN ready. 4bd/3ba house, $ 1300/mo., remodeled, fridge, w/d, dw, bike to ASU, 922-2715 More Trivia... A family of six died in Oregon during WWII as a result of a Japanese balloon bo,wb- FROM STATE Press Cartoon­ ists. .. BRAIN STORM CEN­ TRAL. Order yours today. Only $5! This limited edition will go fast Call Jonathan Inge at 965-2292 for info, or see the display ad in to­ day's State Press. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT ASU- CONDOS avail, now. Questa Vida 3bd/3ba, $1050; 2bd/2ba, $740; Univ. Ranch 3bd/2ba, $925, all appls. in­ cluding w/d. Joel 967-6205 or Greg 755-0299 QUESTA VIDA 3bd/3ba $1195/mo. lux t/h, vltd ceil­ ings, fans, sky lights, w/d, d/w, micro; 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU,'-2 story.: 98 lease begins Spt/Sum. Harris Equity, 829-0902; PAP AGO PARK Village I, 2 story, 3bd/2ba, 1444 sq.ft, w/d, 1200/mo: Call 496-8939 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL f e i ANNOUNCEMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Put Your Mouth W here The $$$ Is! Set appts for vacation resort. No sellingl Flex hrs! Guar, hriy + comm. $18.50 avs. • 894-9884 HiVE AN AMAZING H1MHBI! Prertigiout coed camp in beauti­ ful Mau. seek! caring, motivat­ ed college students f i grads who love kids! GENERAL 8 SPE­ CIALTY COUNSELORS needed. Join a dedicated, Eun team. Competitive w in y +tra w l Camp laconic: 14047M 48M HELP WANTEDGENERAL . needed. Join our industry-lead­ ing North American Distribution Team at our new Scottsdale Airpark facility. Our quality products require your TLC. $7.50+ dependant on experience. Full benefit package. Fast-paced environment. Mon-Fri daytime hours. Apply: 7845 EParadise Lane, Scottsdale AZ 951-2675 For m ore inform ation call (8 8 8 1 5 1 -A PLUS e x t. 5 1 RMMTE NEEDED for $275/mo, 1/4 u til.+$200 dep. Students only. No drugs. Hayden/Ckmelback. Quiet, laid-back, nice people. 946-4490 ask for T. M/F, 2 J -+• share th w/2 F. Mstr bdr, cov'd prkg, WD, pool. $375 +1/3 util. Avail, now. Call Amy 955-7558 day, 7551688 eve. 10 MINS, to ASU, $350/mo. Female. Private bath, phone & fridge. Debra, 379-3524 x 249 2 ROOMMATES wanted to share a 2200 sf house w/lrg diving pool. 917-3002 785-9145 Classifieds WORK! FURNISHED ROOM near Country Club & Southern. Ca­ ble, utils, included, $250/mo. 532-6977 . HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL H e re , life ’s a g a m e & w o rk ’s a b a ll w ith th e A riz o n a D ia m o n d b a c k s ! Nollliu" Imatr. ti winning coniluiiation i|iiitr like ai'iinn-parktil +|i(ii l> ami all- . 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Call for details. Ask for Jeny. 730-5005 95 GMC Sonoma SLS pickup. 5spd, ac, ps, cass, custom wheels. $7,995 Brown & Brown Nissan 461-4300 AUTOMOBILES- 95 SATURN SC2 sunroof, cass, low m i.; very clean. $11,995 Brown & Brown Nis­ san 461-4300 EARLY BIRD special! Euiopesummer 98. W estcoast dep's$478 R/T, Mexico/Caribb$209-5249 R7T, Hawaii - $119' O/W. Please call 1-888-AIRHITCH; http://www.airiiitch.org AIDE/ASST. FOR blind speech therapist. 10-25hr/wk. 1 - 2 people. Great exp. Own car. Pay by client hr. 730-5505 SPRING BREAK Rosarito Beach from $49-$219. For more info, call 1-888-PICANTI 1-888-742-2684 New Phoenix co, seeks 12 peo­ ple w/ environmental awareness to fill office. Great income/flex. hrs. Call now 955-3475 HELP WANTEDGENERAL AZ PEDAL Cab Co. needs rid­ ers for local sports games & Spring Training in Scottsdale. FT or PT. Call 955-8569. •il HONDA CRX Blue, am/fm Cass., Air, 93 k mi, tint, $6000 obo. 868-0466 pgr. 89 VW Cabriolet convertible manual/CD/ac/excellent shape. $5000 obo. Call Sara 453-9271 GREAT STUDENT car. Red Ford Mustang convert, black top, 1994, V-6, all pwr, cruise control, 59K mi. Perfect cond. Asking $11,200 418-7772 91 GALANT Great drive & cond. loaded 4dr 5spd a/c am/fm stereo cass. white w/ blk trim $4500 obo. 381-8830 BADLY NEEDED, transporta­ tion vehicle. Some work OK. Have cash. Please call 265-055L HELP WANTEDGENERAL EARN S cottsdale A irpark facility * D uties include $750-$1500/Week INVOICING, ENTERING Raise all the money your group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus. No investment & very little time needed. There’s no obligation, so why riot call for information today. Call 1-800-323-8454x95. INVENTORY TRANSACTIONS AND HUNG. C omprehensive benefit package . F ast-paced environment. Mon-Fri . D aytime hours. A pply : 7B45 E . P aradise L ane, AZ 9S14675 The United Auto Group- West has an immediate opening for a P /T maintenance person for our Scottsdale Lexus facility. Candidate must be available evenings and weekends. For information, please contact Kelly D. Davis at 675-0015 or kellydauis@sunauto.com AUTOMOBILES^ DISTRIBUTION TEAM AT OUR new TRAVEL CHOLLA BAY/ROCKY POINT, camping cabins. $50/night for 4 people. Addi­ tional persons, $5/ea. 968-8009 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL $8-$10/hr P/t appt. setter for E. Phx. Ins. Agency. M-ThUrs., 4-8pm & oc­ casional Sat. Call Mike or Linda at 952-2707, TRAVEL early bird srecpil EUROPE-SUM M EÄ' WtSTCOASTDtP'S- $4731 Mexico/Oribb.-$Z09-$2̧P.Tj : HAWAà ÉmÊÊÊ CALL 888-AIRHnCH http://WWW.airhltdi'-GH nrstn inn lo in the Fiesta Fun! N ight ---------------------------------------------------------- -----------\ $ MAKE MORE MONET $ Concierge PT 89 per hour +commission Landscaping FT *Near Campus 0Appointment setting N ic e P e o p l e 0 C alx . N ow 7 3 6 -0 5 0 0 Great part-time opportunities Fiesta Inn 2 1 0 0 S. Priest T em p e 2 miles from ASU More info: 804-5285 AWARENESS BEN & JERRY’S Ice Cream, Managers & scoopers for Tempe store. Scoopers & hawkers for Diamondback Baseball season at BankOne Ballpark. Call 9516863, Or fax 951-4212. BOX OFFICE ticket sales. Wknd. nights & wkdys. Bet­ ween 20-30 hrs. Apply within. 921-9877 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Houseperson f HELP WANTEDGENERAL COMPUTERS J oin our industry ­ leading N orth A merican S cottsdale, \ J P a g el7 Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 St a t e P ress INVESTMENT BANKING FIRM seeking Market Research Analyst for Merger/Acquisition Research. Part-time position. Candidate must be Intelligent, aggressive and self-starting. Dlnan &. Company, L.L.C. Find it FASTin the Classifieds College Students and Teachers! Children’s Sommer Camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for Counselors w ith expertise in Horseback Riding, Riilerjr, Music 6 Songs, N ature, Ropes Course, Lifeguards, Camp N orse, and Cooks to w ork Map *7 Aug S. Good salary, fob experience, plus Room/Board. E-mail us at campm an9azstarnet.com or call 1-g o I t l MS7. CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST J o in o u r in d u s t r y l e a d ­ in g 248-870 0 N o r t h AMERICAN D is t r ib u t io n T e a m at Sc o t t s d a l e AIRPARK FACILITY. OUR o ur new MDS Harris, an international leader In the pharmaceu­ tical testing industry, seeks phlebotomists to draw blood samples from study participants and to process samples. We require previous phlebotomy experi­ ence. We currently have early morning, afternoon, and evening shifts available. Number of hours will vary based on staffing needs. Competitive wages for skilled Phlebotomists. Please apply at: QUALITY PRODUCTS TLC., REQUIRE YOUR DUTIES INCLUDE . ASSISTING CUSTOMERS WITH PLACEMENT OF ORDERS, STATUS OF ORDERS, AND PROVIDING TECHNICAL INFORMATION. COMPREHENSIVE BENEFIT package. BE P A R T O F T H E CURE Fa s t paced ENVIRONMENT. MON-FRl SS MDS Harris DAYTIME HOURS. APPLY: 7845 E. P a r a d is e L a n e , Sc o t t s d a l e , 4 6 3 9 SOUTH 36TH S T R E E T P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 0 az 951-2675 A A /E O E Create Your Own Schedule $200 Hiring Bonus Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale’s leading dating service located in Old Town Scottsdale. Have fun calling singles to invite them for a free tour of our center IT 'S IT 'S IT F U N ! C A S T ! P A Y S ! • NO SELLING • Permanent Part time Day/evening shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d » Women Excell » Casual Dress 0 » Automated Dialing System » Fun Atmosphere Rase Pay$*/hr Plus Bonus •**.) FRATERNITIES SORORITIES AND G.D.I.'S! W ant to work outdoors for th é World Series Cham ps (albeit of 1912). Pay Tribute to Harry by pouring the beer he loved! $7 per ho u r an d we'll even loan you a shirt & hat! FOOD TEAM, INC. W e Pay a lot & Staff Fun Stuff! 1438 W. Broadway S te260 W e're right dow n ■ th e street! F O '- ä -IL t S H O R T O N CASH? R E G E N C Y Plasma Makes a Lot of Cents! New Donors Earn $ 8 0 For I Your First Two Donations I Earn Cash - Have Fun . ✓ Flex Schedules & Shifts ✓ Accessible fromMajor Bus Routes ✓ Competitive Pay Grow • Network • Make $$$ 9 6 8 -9 2 0 0 • Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive a • Exdting in-house promotion • Ask us about career opportunities • P/T positions available CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES NEEDED MDS Harris, a lead e r in th e pharm aceutical te s t­ in g in d u s try , h a s o p p o rtu n itie s a v a ila b le for m o n ito rin g activities o f stu d y p articip an ts a n d collecting an d d o c u m e n tin g d ata. G reat ex p eri­ e n c e for science, nursing o r p re m e d m ajors. W e c u rren tly h a v e early m o rn in g , afte rn o o n , a n d e v en in g shifts available o n b o th w eek d ay s a n d w eek en d s. Please a p p ly at: fO G N T E O N Tired of D ialing across America and not getting paid what you're worth??? BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E For confidential interview, call S3 MDS Harris Dobson & Guadalupe 7 7 7 -8 7 5 7 4 6 3 9 SOUTH 36T H STREET PHOENIX, AZ 8 5 0 4 0 Great Part-time opportunity! MDS Harris, an international leader in the pharmaceu­ tical testing Industry, is seeking a medical assistant. Performs and oversees procedures necessary to screen study participants during pre-study events to ensure each participant m e e ts th e req u irem en ts q f th e upcoming study. Phlebotomy experience required. Education in a health-related field preferred. Must be available to work early morning hours. Number of hours will vary based on staffing needs. We offer a competitive hourly rate. If interested, please apply at: BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E (É3 M D S H arris 7 3 5 -0 0 0 0 Warner & Country Club 968-6139 Medical Assistant Hum an r e so u r c e s AA/EOE EOE:MFVD 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 • Tempe For Cutrent Openings & Further Delate '"S c ien ce , Nursing and PreMed Majors*** > Si 0 BONUS!! ■„t») ooc HUMAN R ESO U R C E S- J-M A 4 6 3 9 SOUTH 3 6 T H STREET PHOENIX, A Z 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE HELP W A N T E D G EN ER A L HELP W A N T E D G EN ER A L HELP W A N T E D G ENERAL FAST GROWING N. Scotts. CAMPUS SECURITY assis­ swim school seeks exp’d swim tants now hiring. Good exp. instructors for p/t, f/t positions. and valuable training. Work April-Aug. Pay range $8-12/hr. with police officers. Flex. hrs. DOE. Call 661-0366 Iv. msg. C all now for details @ 9655643 or pick up an app^ at th e . Serious inquires only! DPS bldg, in lot 40. FILM PRODUCTION, talent management, & internships CASE MANAGER avail. Call Creative Talent BSW o r equiv. Interviewing/ Mgmt. 1-800-401-0545. assessment skills, record keep­ ing. 20 hrs/wk. $11.54 hr. Bi­ FUN $$$ lingual helpful. Send resume Product promotion P/T wknds to: Tempe Salvation Army, P.O. in stores at trade shows & spe­ Box 627, Tempe, AZ 85281 or cial events. $6-$7/hr. Call 287-9730 call 967-8649 0 G A R STORE clei-k, P/T, no exp nec, must work thru Sum­ mer Vacation, clean cut, outgo­ ing, like smoke, $6.50/hr. 840-9080 CRUISE SHIP & Land-Tour Jobs - Excellent benefits. World Travel. Ask us how! 517-324-3090 e;xt C59182 DELICIOUS DELIVERIES now hiring drivers:; Drivers, must bave own car & insurance:; PT/FT. Earn $10-$ 15/hn Call 220-0000 ■ _ ,• DELIVERY- $20/HR. avg. De­ liver applications locally. No exp. 1-800-373-3696 ext. 6732 DOMINO'S PIZZA Conte join the excitement with thè # i food’delivery team for the ÀSU area. With the addi­ tion of hot wings, salads & breadsticks this Domino's is one of the top campus stores in the country. We need mòre f/t & p/t, phone help, pizza mak­ ers, & drivers, (especially late night shifts & lunch shifts) to help us make, bake, & take all these orders. Our drivers- can make $7-$14 per hour includ­ ing mileage & tips. Safe driving casti bonuses can also be. earned. We are very flexible & can work around your school schedule. We support a drug free: work environment. Apply in person after H am at 903 S. Rural, Tempe, o r . c a ll' 968-' 5555 EOE. :• • FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters, for Univeiv sal Portraits. $7-12/hr, Call Kristin at 777-1054. GRASS ROOTS community or­ ganizer, assist low income peo­ ple fight for jobs, wages, & housing. Sèlf starter 40+ hrs. Eves. & Sats. 253-1111, mornings LOCAL TEMPE Manf. seeks re­ tail clerk FT/PT morns, or aftrns For its Factory O utlet Store. Easy work, friendly, casual en­ viron. Close to ASt); $7-8/hr. guaran. Can earn more w/ bo­ nus. Call Brad, 967-2678 jf An exciting breakfast J &. lunch restaurant is hiring a Server ■ P/T, T, Th 8y 1 , weekend day;' excellent starting wage and always enjoyable. Apply in person at: 1660 S. Alma School Rd. Mesa, AZ O perator • G eneral M aintenance j N ight A udit • Incom e A udit • A ccounting A ssistan t • F ood & B erverag e C ontroller • B u sin ess C enter Assist an t •N ight C lean ers • Landscaper • M in ba r A ttendant a S ecurity -PT/Flex ble Supervisors up tp $9/hr. Counter Sales up to $8/hr. Aisle Vendors up to $15/hr.* ‘including tips C a ll 9 9 0 -1 1 2 3 e x t. 3 0 0 # PT M-TH 6 9pm $7/hr. near ASU! Survey telemarketing, no pressure presentation. No exp. nec. Call Norm Gifford @ 829-3460 Call to schedule im m ediate interview 4 6 2 -3 8 0 0 SUMMER WORK program for student teachers & seniors in education. Deal 1 on 1 with hundreds of parents & stud­ ents. 9 week program; earn $4000. For info, call 557-8888 This should bo your ad Call 965-6735 TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t, nights & weekends, fun job, 947-6562; 2013 N. Scottsdale Rd. VOGUE New co. seeking 5 people who want to make a change. Fun, freedom, ¿fc finance. Call now 955-3460 WANTED STUDENT Therapist Will train. Work w/ a 5 yr. old autistic child. Work in a dis­ crete trial training program. $7.50-9.00/hr. 706-0860 Make your advertising $$ $$ work harder! Put it in the Classifieds! C h ia s s if i& d s 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 GUARANTEED $10/H R O p p o r tu n ity t o m a k e m u ch m ore! Vend Cookies at Ball O ne Ballpark Great PT position / Flexible hours • Avg. 4 hr. shifts » Season runs March 29-Sept. 27 • Health Insurance Volt, in partnership with Bank One, Is seeking PART TIME DATA ENTRY OPERATORS for the Bankcard center in Tempe. Must have 8000 KSH or type 35 WPM. Evening and weekend hours. Pay is $8.50. CALL IMMEDIATELY!!!!! If you can carry 25 lbs, are in reasonable shape & enjoy working w ith people, call M-F, 9am-Noon. . V O L T / 9 4 4 -7 0 0 6 M Volt Services Group T em pe 7 3 0 -1 8 0 8 What are you doing after graduation? > E S -O H T.;:t A T .. G A I N £ Y;.. R A H t H DISCOVER THE PEOPLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! * 'T ra v e l around th e w orld for free & get paid for it!! I The American School for International Tour Directing (13 Day Course) I rrO M E R S E R V IC I [ R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S I j M arketing In tern sh ip O pportunity DRIVERS Enroll now.... Space limited to 26 students. No age'restrictions. Schedules vary/ based on seniority EOE M/F/D/V 1998 classes available June 1-13 Nov. 30-Dec. 12 * Hoâ/HodteSé • FrontDesk ' ’ Slhgîng'Food Service »Bussers • Room Service Cashier • Coffee Bar Attendant-am • Cocktail Server 99 1-9 670 1 Applications are accepted Mon. 9arri-Noon and Tues. 3pm-6pm; At ttie Human Resources Office 7500 É. Doubletree Ranch Rd. e enter at the west end of the building next to the loading dock. Certain positions may require testing. Please apply for this excellent oppo rtu n ity at: BE P A R T O F T H E C U R E S3 M D S H arris You Pick the Right Time! (Mon-Sat between 7am&9:30pm) AM or PM, WE CAN CREAK A Shift Around Your School Schedule. TEMPE MléôIONPALMÔ HOTEL Looking for team players who desire exceptionally pleasant surroundings... • On-the-job training - Paid •Resumer builder • Improve communication skills ’ Weekly checks • State-of-the-art facilities ’ Casual atmosphere • Floor Cara Specialist (y s vsysnf) * Front Desk Attendant • A ll A PM Food Sarver * AM Room Server • Room Server (rscepBonlstl • U tllity/G rounda Maintenance • Banquet Steward • PBX O perator (switchboard) * Banquet Setup Supervisor . (•»*■ ■■ ■ !— *»«> For additional openings call the CALL TODAY or APPLY TODAY JOB HOTUNE • (602) 894-1400 ext 578 Benefits include: , Competitive Pay Health Insurance Long-Term Savings Plan Apply M-F 8a-5p, fax resum es to 966-5148 60 E ast Fifth Street, Tempe 85281 Mon-Fri, 9am-5:30pm PDoyou Hfeegnat bcMMt. paidvacations,tuition reimbursement and friendly people? We've got it ail! A p p ly M-F, 9 -3 See, E Q Ï/A A . Sa tikHpaapaltoi. ■ i I (Conditionally licensed by th e Arizona State Board for Private Post-Secondary Education) e lfïS i I F or M ore Inform atio n C a ll : Hyatt supports a drug free workpjlace. AA/EDE/M /F/D/V H u m a n r e s o u r c e s - J-M 4 6 3 9 SOUTH 36TH STREET P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE - I Experience the benefits at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale: • Medical/Dental Insurance » Life Insurance »• 401 Vacation/Sick (k) Plan Pay • Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates RENTAL S A tlM AGENTS Currently available: BANK ONE BALLPARK STUDENT WORK Up to $9.40. Flexible sched­ ules around classes. No exp. nec. Great resume builder. Na­ tional scholarship program. Conds. exist. Call 2124)551. 2 0 DATA ENTRY OPERATORS - P a rt T im e Now in Scottsdale, AZ Call (602) 954-5238 ual currently in p u rsu it o f a m arketing d e g re e . Com e be a part o f the team in our 20,000 square foot restaurant located 20 yards from j SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emplymt. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon fojr interview btwn 2-4pm, 921-8282 . ;3 y e a r driving history M VR d a te will be an enthusiastic an d creative individ­ We are looking for fun, energetic people to be part o f baseball history! POSTAL JOBS Start $14.08/hr. + benefits. For exam & application info. Call 1800-280-9769 ext. AZ104. 7am-9pm, 7 days. Fax your resum e or apply in person to: The Scottsdale Plaza Resort 7200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale. AZ 85253 als o n th e ASU cam p u s. The successful can d i­ Servers Kitchen Staff Cashiers Merchandisers SELL ADVERTISING for the State Press & pave the road to an excellent future! (Talk about a resume builder!) Hours are flexible. Pay is excellent. Work is intense. Must have a car. In­ terested? Pick up an application at the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center. Do it today! Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 HELP W A N T E D G ENERAL • AM/PM/A fternoon m a c e u tic a l te s tin g in d u s try , is lo o k in g fo r a H iring P/T JOB, $10/hr. "human sign" Sat. & Sun. 7-4- Transportation needed. Call Adam for more info. 968-5514, leave message HELP W A N T E D G ENERAL • B u sser M arketing Intern to h elp p ro m o te o u r clinical tri­ A RIZO NA DIAMONDBACKS BALLYARD BREW ERY RETAIL Arizona's Jrrapparet leaatpr is now haring a store manager in Fiesta Mall. We offer exc! train­ ing, promotability & fun atmos. Call Kathryn at Red Eye for immed. interview. 833-9207 • R oom A ttendant in spec tress • G u est S erv ice A sso ciate • A sst . F ront D esk M anager • L in e C ook MDS Harris, an international leader in th e phar­ GRAND OPENING REAL ESTATE? *$8 $ 10/hr. Need cart and charisma.-. >Ctfll Maity. John HaU & Associates, 844-5900. NEED STUDENT for MD office, Scotts. 12-20 hrs./wk, Mostly afternoons. General office work, local errands. Must have own transp. Call 947-7651 or fax re­ sume 947-0274. R E S OR T a r c ia 's E°E MECHANICAL* TECH, ft/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school or college de­ sired. Starting pay $6-10/hr. w/ advancement. 15, mins, to ASU. Flex. hrs. Call 956-8200, days MONEY HUNGRY? Our s u c c e s s d ep en d s on your experience and desire to b e a part of our team . Many Food & B everage & R oom s area positions are now available: Ideal for students, or anyone seeking part-time work in a fun atmosphere. ^ MARKETING REP. for the State Press ad dept. Seeking creative student with excellent communication skills & a flair for details. In this po­ sition you will work on movie promotions, contests & market­ ing projects for the State Press, from start to finish. Must be Mac literate & comfortable using Quark & MS Office. Looking for 20 hrs/wk; can fit hours around your schedule. $5.50/hr. To apply call Jackie Eldridge today, 956-6555. HELP W A N T E D G ENERAL1 Tired of being at the bottom of the food dhaiii? Need 2 moti­ vated individuals;. Call 491 5136,4-5pm. -Start today ! PLAZA Work At The Ballpark! T.C. Egglngton’s MARKETING M f*QR wanted for internship w/pay. Agressive Scottsdale business. Contact John at 990-7676: ACME Bar & Grill. Female pref. THE SCOTTSDALE \ G H O P W A N TED G ENERAL MODELS - SEEKING ASU’S cutest girls for video/internet. No pom. $500+/day. 706-7761 MARKETING ASST, wanted P/T with strong Desktop Pub­ lishing skills espec. Quark. Good pay, flex. hrs.V close to ASU. Call Brad, 967-2678" DRIVER, OWN vehicle and in­ surance req'd. Small package and document delivery service Call Ed 756^1667 N ow State P ress Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 Page 18 345-8317 209 E. Baseline, Bldg. E-ID3 After hrs/wkndv t-SOD-883-6123, ext. 7903 :I S t a t i P ress P age! 1 9 Thursday, M arch 5 ,1 9 9 8 HELP W ANTED- HELP W ANTEDSALES HELFWANTED- HELP WANTEDF O O D ig R V IC E ZACSON CORPORATION- We have immediate openings for these shifts: 7am-3:30pm, 7amnoon, 12:30pm -9:30pm ,lpm 9:30pm, 5pm-9:30pm, 4pm9pm. Our fully automated and •professional environm ent provides: $ ll/h r average with $8.50 base. Call 470-2064 for more information. FEMALE SALES person need­ ed at upscale men's store to sell hot new women's sports wear line. Exp. req. call at 954-7005 Biltmore FP. TELEPHONE SALES, setting appts. for sales rep. for water purification units: Working for m ajor co. Make up to $250/wk., 4 hrs./day. Call Jeny at 829-9255.4Aqua Chill BUSY DELI counter bdtp. Off University. P/T]? M-F llam-5pm and 4pm-8pm. Also Sat, 7amlpm. Call 967-1411 PERSON TO Person Marketing, not telemarketing! Sales asso­ ciates needed. $9/hr. + daily bonuses. Day, eve & wknd hrs. Call 753-1771 or 362-8299 Rind th© S ta te P ress oh the Intern et: h ttp ://n e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u / RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS CREDIT MAY T H E MAY D EPARTM ENT STORESCOM PANY GRATEFUL REAR XIGHT with X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young Starting at $7.50 per hour • Employee discount at all ROBINSONS-MAY stores • Casual work environment • Flexible schedule • No experience necessary • Shifts begin between the hours of 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. :£vcry Thursday!* CROCODILE CAFE has imme­ diate opening for host po si­ tion. $6.50/hr. + tips. Apply at 525 S. Mill Ave, Terripe. . HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE MADISON'S IN Scottsdale Now hiring cocktail waitresses, host­ esses^ door/security staff. Great pay. Apply in person between 2-6pm daily. 7108 É. Stetson Dr. MAJERLE'S SPORTS Grill is currently hiring for hostess, $ 6 -7 .5 0 / H R . waitstaff, & kitchen. Apply in . Preschool teacher or van driver. person, 24 N. 2nd St., Phx. Pt/ft, training avail. Children's Village Learning Center, 949•5552;:;/. RESTAURANTS/ PART/FULL TIME Coffee House server at airport. Flexible sched­ ule. 731-4848, lv. msg. BARS PETS CHILD CARE - $6/hr: 3:006:30 pm. Rural/Southern. 2 kids, 8 & 11 yrs. Transportatioh required. 829-1129 FREE DOG to good home- job transfer can't take her. 6mb., spade, all shots. Call for de­ tails. 967-6822 CHILDCARE: PREFER early childhood education major and exp. $6.00/hr. T,Th 2:30-6 pint Call 814-8660 “Your Neighborhood- : »Over lOOMerwttoms * Cheap É Ban * Ah Appeôzero on Heppy Hr, 4 SatetKtes I p i êà&eote Food • S p irits * Pool • » Bowling • Cigars • 4245 N . C raftsm an a . O ld Town S cottsdale 9 9 0 -7 1 1 1 1/5 Your Wing O rder FREF FREE LOST/FOUND THIS SUMMER, take care of 2 yr. twins & 4 yr. old. 30^40 hrs/wk Good pay, own. trans. CPR & FA cert. Exp. pref. 32nd St./Shea, Lauren/Steve 788-6838 • FOUND: GOLD chains (3) found in ladies restroom Fall .'97, Admin. Bldg., B wing. Please call benefits office at 9657290 for description. SERVICES SERVICES Swt.&Moo. 844-SHED SERVICES U n iv e rs ity & D obson FREE LOST/FOUND LOST BIRD named Echo. Needs medicine. Reward. Green body, pink chest, gray-blue head, scar on head, orange beak. 968-2907 LOST CAT $ large reward $ if found. White w/ gray ears, paws ■& tail* blue eyes. Call ■517-0269 , PERSONALS ASU JEWISH Students! Join us for Game works, Thurs. at 7:30 Hillel. Call 967^7563 for info. ASU JEWISH Students! We'll train you to teach and pay you to learn. Call Rabbi Lee for info. ASU PITCHFORKS, Women’s a Capella, are having their Spring concert! Friday, March 6 at 8:30 p.m. in Murdock Hall. $5 donation at the dopr. « K RO N IC CO M IC Comic & collectable store: 4228 N. Scottsdale Rd. www.kroniccomics.cbm 947-3650 NEED A date? Be a contestant on Einstein's Lovin' Lunchin' Meet & Eat Contest! See Thurs­ day's State Press for details or stop by Einstein's at Rural & University. ADOPTION FUN CHRISTIAN couple wish­ es to adopt newborn/infant, cpunceling/lawyer available. Call anytime, 892-7373 « SERVICES T-SHIRTS AT a GREAT price 4 frat./sor, club, bus., church, team, or etc. SAM 9644416 TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING J2.50/PG, J15/RES. Proofed. Laser. A PA /M tA . Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. •F FREE EMERGENCY CO N TRA CEPTIO N • “M ORNING AFTER” PILL Taken w ithin 4 8 hours o f unp ro tected intercourse. M edical screening necessary. • FREE PREGNANCY TESTING No ap p o in tm e n t necessary. • ABORTION WITH TWILIGHT SLEEP Saturday ap p o in tm en ts available. • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAMS Low c o st c o m p lete birth control. Affordable PAP-smears •FEMALE NURSE PRACTITIONER ■ Better Ingredients. I Better Pizza. 6 m+ Tax EOE SP69 O n e -T o p p in s P iz z a ASTROLOGICAL. FORECAST N ot valld w /any ôffefTS: Additional toppings extra by Frances Drake Servins ASU 899-3434 Thursday, March 5, 1998 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) ZORRO’S FRESH burrito grill. CASHIER p/t days + evs, avail. Exp. a plus. Competitive pay. Apply at SÊ corner of McClin­ tock & Guadalupe btw. Fry's and Pet Co. 2-^5 p.m. WOODSHED II located at Broadw ay & 5 2 n d Street across from the R am ad a Inn. A close tie could seem set in his or her ways. Be selective about invitations you accept; or you?11 be spending time at a pretty dull affair. SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22 tp Dec. 21) There’s no sense argu­ ing with a person whose mind isalready made up. Avoid a ten­ dency to let things slide on the job. A relative is not ready to comprise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You can’t call the shots all the time. Try to be cooperative with others and listen to their ideas. Be careful not to waste money in the pursuit of good times. AQUARIUS (Ian. 20 to Feb. 18) A friend is inscrutably manipu­ lative, and perhaps better left to his or her own devices. You d o n ’t have tim e f o r gam es. Watch excess spending in con­ nection with pleasurable pur­ suits. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) A conversation appears to be beaded now here. A lthough so m e o n e’s lack o f m anners could leave you feeling slighted, don’t make a mountain out o f a molehill. YOU BORN TODAY are independent and do w ell in business for yourself. Usually, you’re a good moneymaker, but • you may be more drawn to the arts, and like professions than business. When you find a con­ structive outlet for your sensi­ tivities, you achieve the heights in both the arts and sciences. Friends may be helpfill to you in business affairs, but you may not warm up to them quickly. ACME BAR & GriH, Scot­ tsdale, now hiriiig for doormen. See Dave, 4245 N. Craftsman C t (Scotte. Rd,/5th Ave. approx.) M c C l i n t o c i & C u r r y • 921-7343 Apply in person Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 3p.m. May C redit Sendee C enter 1615 South 52nd S treet Tempe, A Z APIES (Mmph 2 | to April J 9) You're raring to go, but could easily ruffle someone's feathers!: Avoid bossiness and coming on too strong. Career efforts should meet with success. / TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You could be organizing a party ^ and you are likely to get involved in a dispute with a friend. Financial developments are in your favor. Avoid further procrastination. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) What seems like a lucky break could bring you success and recognition in business. You have extra inceptive and can make things happen for yourself , in your career. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Others gladly cooperate with you, assuming you’re not too demanding! It should be a posi­ tive day regarding career invest­ m ents. L eisure activities are filled with fun, LEO (Ju ly 23 to Aug. 22) There’s a favorable accent on both work and play. You take the lead in planning good times. New opportunities await you on the job. Self-discipline plus ini­ tiative equals progress. VIRGO (Aug 23 to Sept. 22) You could do an old friend a favor related to a work matter. Try to be on time for appoint­ m ents. H ap p in ess com es through fam ily interests and home-based activities. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct, 22) It takes some effort on your part but you do m eet a p artn er halfway. When it comes to your career, try to b e m ore b u si­ nesslike- RESTAURANTS/ BARS Needs team players w/ right at­ titude. Top wages + incentive. Flexible schedules, no wee­ kends, nights, or holidays, if ready to have fun call 45.3-0842 BOSTON'S The May Credit Service Center in Teiripe handles inbound calls from our retail sales associates for assistance with customer credit purchases. We are STUDENT FILM this summer! Actors/actresses needed . Audi lions 3/1 & 3/8 ! Hurry ! Con­ tact: DAnder6774@aol.com spo rts deli LOCAL BAR is having a grand reopening & needs honest, hardworking people, bartenders, cocktail persons, bouncers, ¿te, No exp. nec. Apply in person 3-8pm M-F Mustang Sally's corner of Ap­ aché & Terrace RESTAURANTS/ BARS JOB OPPORTUNjTjES__ RUTH'S CHRIS Steak House now hiring friendly, efficient, exp. hostess p/t, eves. $7/hr. Apply in person daily 2-4pm, 2201 E. Camelback Road (15 min. from ASU) DON & CHARLIE S, One of the Valley's busiest restaurants is hiring for host/ess, cocktail servers & food servers, Exp. req'd. for servers. Apply in per­ son at 7501 E. Camelback Rd. Scottsdale RECEPTIONIST: GROWING co. looking for a strong cus­ tomer service oriented recep­ tionist. Must have, excellant communication & telephone manner. Faxing, filing, data en­ try. Willing to train. Call Today-Cortec Consulting: ph. 602-465-0003, fax 602-4560004 PART-TIME ¡O B OPPORTUNITIES RED ROBIN Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are im portant. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101N. 44th St. 952-0585. P/T OFFICE help wanted. Morn. & afternoons 20-25 hrs/ wk. Good phone skills & basic computer knowledge a +. Apply in person @ 3100 S. Rural, Suite #1 INTERN NEEDED C*+ or vis­ ual b$sic programmer to write •short program for investment mgt find. Will pay hrly. Good exp. fot! aspiring student. Call Phil Oelze 222-4680. Tempe has immediate openings for experienced waitstaff, .bartenders & cooks. Have fun & make good m oney. Apply today at,1375W. Elliot. - CORK'NCLEA VER HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL INTERNSHIPS HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE 524 W. Broadway Rd. Scottsdale /T empe , 831-8500 See o u r a d o n Thursday! MATH TEST! Review sessions for MÀT 106, 117, & 119; Call for datés & times.Ph. 967-3774 $20/34hre SERVICES 0 PENIN(j ^ H IN D S IG H T S Vintage Eucwear F A M ILY P LA N N IN G INSTITUTE Serving Tempe SMcClintock & Southern TUTORS 2334 h I G STUDENT ID N . Scottsdale Rd . Required 945-4999 lendale 7806 N. 27m A v e . 997-7493 FREECASE . ' *Up KillQ- ' S ta te P r e s s C lassified s ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 M atthew s C enter, B asem ent O ffice: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form N am e H o m e P hone Business Phone Address City, S tate Zip 2012 N. S cottsdale Rd., North of ncDowcH Cose # 2, Vendor 160 MihJhlsiuo|ióoqndcocueuculnsspurtïiosc ’ TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING BERM PAPERS RESUMES APPLICATIONS H ave y o u r w ork d o n e by a. professional and form er fastest typist in th e li.S.A. 1-D ayServlce K athy • 2 6 2 -5 4 5 4 P le a s e print o n e letter per box, leave a blank box betw een words. INSTRUCTION Private Party P le a s« be sure to check your a d . M ake sure it read s exactly as you w ish it to a p p ea r in th e S te la Press, including, punctuation. P lease check yo u r a d th e firs t d ay it a p p ears-th e liab ility o f to e S tate Press sh all not exceed th e cost o f the a d an d -c red it m ay: b e given for the firs t insertion o n ly . M in o r sp ellin g erro rs do not q u a lify 'fo r m ake­ goods. N o refunds w ill be g ive n , but if you n eed to can cel your ad a c red it w ill be held on account fo r fu tu re advertising. a P o B j H rn m p m B v r i • $¡¡00; i i 'm¡Ml ■ ? ■ 1■ ' ' ' 1 day, $ 2.60 per line 2^4 days, $ 1 .9 9 per lin e, p er day 5 -9 days, $ 1 .7 6 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.6 0 per lin e, p er day 3 linem inim um . Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost o f 2 lines. »w p ■v?iy a w a I k M IH lM lin ira d la M : Check#.___I Commercial 1-4 days, $ 1 .7 0 per line, per day 5 -9 days, $ 1.6 5 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1 .4 9 per line, par day " j eMi t uPt ew- a- Ff sy ■■■■■’j » m » -ib ............................ * atom i» * im m s * B a rte n d in g A c a d e m y € . !S? $ 1 f it Have Fun... Make Money... Meet People CaJI1-800-BARTEND 0 1998 King Features Syndicate Inc. u. í I f f ¡uJí. w w v v .b a rte n d in g a c a d e m y .c o m State P ress Thursday, March 5,1998 Page 20 WANTED Jr/soph, IvsIM /club sports & stud orgs, tm plyr, creativ, schl spir, wants 2b ix ^ r e p <§) ASU. Much nrg req’d. Tlike will be on campus soon to find next year’s student rep: Interested? E-mail coHege.stuff(§)nike.com fo r more in fo . fr r e a fe ' ae. aanitssrvhv. /a g e [gates open @ 4pm ] Station Soul Cracker Kongo Shock Buck-O-Nine Buok*0*Nine . m> • • « • • • m m ? [gates open @ 11:30am] Chuck E. Baby Carvin Jones Band Bit 0 Jane Lemon Krayola Naked The Refreshments The IRßfreskmmts Jump Start Your Career! 4|r m ♦ ■'.# ♦ meupdki directory Assistance Agents Excell Agent Services, a world-class leader in providing long distance directory information, is currently seeking Directory Assistance Agents. F/T and P/T. Paid Training. Weekly Pay Periods. 401 (k). 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